Tags: ECB | Mario Draghi | Europe | rates

ECB to Start Laying Groundwork for Stimulus Exit

ECB to Start Laying Groundwork for Stimulus Exit
Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank (Dreamstime)

Wednesday, 06 September 2017 06:07 PM EDT

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi is set to start laying the groundwork for stimulus reduction when policymakers meet on Thursday, giving investors some hints but probably holding off on any major commitment.

Concerned that strong signals could raise market volatility and undo its plans, ECB policymakers are seen shifting their message only incrementally, setting up for a bigger move in October or December, before its 2.3 trillion euro ($2.74 trillion) bond purchase scheme expires at the end of the year.

In the ultimate decision over extending or winding down the purchases, Draghi will have to resolve a dilemma: euro zone economic growth is on its best run in a decade, yet inflation is weak and will miss the ECB's target for years to come. That raises questions about the central bank's ability to fulfill its mandate of keeping inflation close to but below 2 percent.

The relentless firming of the euro, partly a function of the euro zone's solid economic run, is only exacerbating this dichotomy, as a strong currency puts a natural lid on export prices and ultimately inflation.

But with growth exceeding expectations, unemployment falling fast and the threat of deflation long gone, some analysts say Draghi has few reasons to maintain what is essentially an emergency set up and that the main question is just how quick the exit should be.

The ECB is widely expected to bump up its 2018 growth forecasts on Thursday in what could be the fourth consecutive quarterly upgrade of the projection.

"Despite recent euro strength, there is no compelling economic case to keep buying at the current rate — the macro outlook simply does not merit it," Daiwa economist Chris Scicluna said.

"The (projections) suggests there is still a case for continued asset purchases in the New Year, albeit only at a reduced rate, to give a further modest boost to inflation two years ahead, and also to try to limit the risks of a harmful tightening of financial conditions," Scicluna added.

The ECB announces its rate decision at 7:45 a.m. New York time, followed by Draghi's news conference at 8:30 a.m.

Analysts polled by Reuters predicted no policy change on Thursday but that bond buys, now running at 60 billion euros a month, will be cut by a third in a decision later this year.

TWEAKS

For Thursday, the question is how strongly policymakers should signal a shift that is now essentially expected by all investors. The ECB also needs to decide how to address the issue of the firming euro.

Draghi is seen certain to ask the ECB's committees to prepare policy options for the coming meetings, a signal that has in the past preceded actions.

Some also expect him to tweak the bank's long-standing guidance on asset buys, giving up a reference to the option of raising asset purchases.

With some policymakers squeamish about such a signal, an alternative option would be to leave in the reference for increasing purchases while adding a reference to a cut, making the guidance symmetrical.

Draghi will find it difficult to avoid the issue of the euro's firming after policymakers expressed concern in July about the risk of an overshooting euro.

"A further rise of, say, 5 percent in effective terms — broadly equivalent to around 1.30 against the dollar and not our central case — would probably lead the central bank to be more cautious," BNP economist Luigi Speranza said.

"Any significant breach of this level might prompt the ECB to continue at the current pace, even at the risk of potential scarcity issues casting doubt on the feasibility of such a plan."

But Draghi's hands are increasingly tied as the asset buys are slowly running up against the ECB's self-imposed rules.

Abandoning the rules would be legally difficult while including new assets in the scheme would risk sending the wrong signal, some economists argue.

"It appears that the ECB’s lone viable option is to accept the legal limits and gradually scale back the purchases next year," Commerzbank economist Joerg Kraemer said.

"In a first step, it could reduce the monthly purchases to 40 billion from 60 billion euros at the start of 2018 and step back further at mid-year," he added. "But by the end of 2018, the purchases are likely to be history."

© 2026 Thomson/Reuters. All rights reserved.


StreetTalk
European Central Bank President Mario Draghi is set to start laying the groundwork for stimulus reduction when policymakers meet on Thursday, giving investors some hints but probably holding off on any major commitment.
ECB, Mario Draghi, Europe, rates
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2017-07-06
Wednesday, 06 September 2017 06:07 PM
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